All natural numbers are integers, not all integers are natural numbers.
Negative numbers are not natural, but there are negative integers. Examples are -1,-2,-3,-4, and so on. These are all integers but none of them is a natural number.
No. Natural numbers are the non-negative integers.
No. Natural numbers are integers, no decimals, no fractions.
No. Natural numbers are 0 and positive integers.
They are both whole numbers (integers) and natural numbers.All natural numbers are integers, but integers is a larger group of numbers.The group consists of the natural numbers, zero and the whole negative numbers (e.g. '-4' and '-560').
Zero is not a natural number because the definition of a natural number is the set of positive integers that does not contain zero.
It depends on what you consider a natural number. If you consider it to be the set of all integers starting from 1 and going upward, then no, 0 is not a natural number.However, if you consider a natural number to be the set of all non-negative integers, then 0 is included in the set of natural numbers.
The set of negative integers.
Yes. Every whole number and every whole negative number and zero are all integers.
A prime number is a natural number that has no natural number as a factor other than itself or 1. An irrational number is not a natural number, so an irrational number can't be prime.
All integers are whole numbers. The natural numbers are zero and the positive integers. Thus, any negative integer (-1, -2, -3, etc.) is whole but not "natural."